S
Steve_B
Hi all,
As per my intro post, the time has come to get to grips with the hot water system in my house so I have a few questions if I may? I'm trying to learn the layout of it all so please accept my apologies if anything I ask is stupid. I have done lots of research before posting so hopefully the info I provide will be logical...
I'm sure it'll help if I explain the setup:
The water supply features a pretty old central heating system including a Thorn M44/54C boiler in the kitchen, cylinder in the airing cupbard, a CW tank and a separate expansion tank, both in loft. Rads are a mix of single and double convector, with standard on/off valves.
All cold water (inc bathroom) is fed from the rising main.
This is the general makeup of the hot water pipes etc:
(clicky thumbs...)
I have traced the pipes as best I can and researched online and I think I have it labelled up right in the above.
I believe I have a gravity fed, indirect, vented system. Does this look right to you?
The shower is an old Mira mixer (non thermostatic, non power) and the first problem I would like to resolve is the slow flow and the 1mm difference between freezing and boiling. I changed all the washers and o-rings in it last weekend as it was leaking terribly. I had hoped it would improve the flow but it hasn't...
The vertical distance from the shower head to the bottom of the CW tank is 20 inches which doesn't seem a lot...
I've ready many forums etc and I understand the basic options are to either: raise the CW tank, replace the shower with a power shower, or install a pump. I'm not keen on a pump and I'm unsure if a power shower will be a worthy investment (may as well get an electric one installed instead?).
So the first question batch if I may:
Would raising the CW tank in the loft by 1 metre make a worthwhile difference (considering when I dropped the shower head 1m there was no noticeable flow increase - or is this a red herring)?
From research, others who have asked the question on the net have recieved mixed responses to this question so I'm unsure if I should bother...
What I did notice however, was by dropping the shower head, I can control the temperature a lot more accurately. I assume this is because the extra metre allows just enough extra hot water to balance with the cold from the mains?
If this is the case I think it's worth raising the tank just for that alone.
If I do raise the CW tank, will I need to raise the small expansion tank too? I read one article that said if you don't, you can flood the loft but I'm not sure why this would... ?
Also, could someone please explain why is there an expansion pipe into both the tanks? I assume one is not in use and the cylinder leads to the active one, but how can I discover which (the water in both tanks is cold at all times)?
EDIT: Oh, and sorry, one more, the CW tank is 24"W * 23"L *19"D with the water up to 16". I calculate this as about 30 gallons. This seems small. Would a bigger tank give substantially more pressure, as in theory there would be more water weight pushing on the outlet?
Thanks for taking the time to read this and for any help you're able to give.
Regards
Steve
As per my intro post, the time has come to get to grips with the hot water system in my house so I have a few questions if I may? I'm trying to learn the layout of it all so please accept my apologies if anything I ask is stupid. I have done lots of research before posting so hopefully the info I provide will be logical...
I'm sure it'll help if I explain the setup:
The water supply features a pretty old central heating system including a Thorn M44/54C boiler in the kitchen, cylinder in the airing cupbard, a CW tank and a separate expansion tank, both in loft. Rads are a mix of single and double convector, with standard on/off valves.
All cold water (inc bathroom) is fed from the rising main.
This is the general makeup of the hot water pipes etc:
(clicky thumbs...)
I have traced the pipes as best I can and researched online and I think I have it labelled up right in the above.
I believe I have a gravity fed, indirect, vented system. Does this look right to you?
The shower is an old Mira mixer (non thermostatic, non power) and the first problem I would like to resolve is the slow flow and the 1mm difference between freezing and boiling. I changed all the washers and o-rings in it last weekend as it was leaking terribly. I had hoped it would improve the flow but it hasn't...
The vertical distance from the shower head to the bottom of the CW tank is 20 inches which doesn't seem a lot...
I've ready many forums etc and I understand the basic options are to either: raise the CW tank, replace the shower with a power shower, or install a pump. I'm not keen on a pump and I'm unsure if a power shower will be a worthy investment (may as well get an electric one installed instead?).
So the first question batch if I may:
Would raising the CW tank in the loft by 1 metre make a worthwhile difference (considering when I dropped the shower head 1m there was no noticeable flow increase - or is this a red herring)?
From research, others who have asked the question on the net have recieved mixed responses to this question so I'm unsure if I should bother...
What I did notice however, was by dropping the shower head, I can control the temperature a lot more accurately. I assume this is because the extra metre allows just enough extra hot water to balance with the cold from the mains?
If this is the case I think it's worth raising the tank just for that alone.
If I do raise the CW tank, will I need to raise the small expansion tank too? I read one article that said if you don't, you can flood the loft but I'm not sure why this would... ?
Also, could someone please explain why is there an expansion pipe into both the tanks? I assume one is not in use and the cylinder leads to the active one, but how can I discover which (the water in both tanks is cold at all times)?
EDIT: Oh, and sorry, one more, the CW tank is 24"W * 23"L *19"D with the water up to 16". I calculate this as about 30 gallons. This seems small. Would a bigger tank give substantially more pressure, as in theory there would be more water weight pushing on the outlet?
Thanks for taking the time to read this and for any help you're able to give.
Regards
Steve
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